He's a millionaire

MoMa

DSK's riches come from a couple of places:

A series of well-paying jobs: Deputy Commissioner of the Economic Planning Agency; Deputy (Member of Parliament) to the National Assembly; Minister of Industry and International Trade; corporate lawyer; economics professor at the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris; member of the French National Assembly; visiting professor at Stanford; personal advisor to the Secretary General of the OECD; Minister of Economy, Finance and Industry of France (he managed the launch of the Euro).

The IMF: $420,930 in tax free salary from the IMF. (Plus $75,350 as a "cost of living" supplement from the IMF.)

An unnamed French actress who said Strauss acted 'like a gorilla' after inviting her back to a Paris flat.

14 unnamed females who were friends of Thierry Anderson, a talk show host. He says, "Everyone knew about it. I have 14 women pals who have told me: “He tried to jump me.”

A Mexican maidwho DSK sexually assaulted in Mexico, when he made an official working visit, according to the anonymously authored book, "DSK."

Martina [last name unknown], a ‘tall and willowy’ journalist based in Europe, who says, "It was after a group interview. He got my phone number from his embassy or the Institut Francais and started calling me, saying “If you go out with me you can have your own interview”.

And yet he still has a large family

Anne Sinclair and DSKAP

Wives:

Hélène Dumas, who was 18 when DSK married her in 1967. He was 20.

Brigitte Guillemette, a communications expert who encouraged DSK to do a makeover in 1983. He shaved his beard, got a new wardrobe, and got rid of his glasses. In 1984, he married her.

Anne Sinclair, a TV journalist and his current wife. She flew to New York to visit him in jail.

Children:

Vanessa, Dumas' daughter.

Navy, Dumas' daughter.

Laurin, Dumas' daughter.

Camille, Guillemette's daughter. Born in 1985.

An entourage of important friends and allies

Bernard-Henri Levy, a French intellectual, philosopher, and journalist. He recently defended DSK: "The Strauss-Kahn I know, who has been my friend for 20 years and who will remain my friend, bears no resemblance to this monster, this caveman, this insatiable and malevolent beast now being described nearly everywhere. Charming, seductive, yes, certainly; a friend to women and, first of all, to his own woman, naturally, but this brutal and violent individual, this wild animal, this primate, obviously no, it’s absurd."

Anne Mansouret, a local Socialist party councillor. She allegedly dissuaded Tristane Banon from filing charges against DSK a decade ago.

Gilles Finchelstein, an intellectual and politician who served as DSK's advisor when he was Minister of Economy

Alain Minc, a political advisor, economist, and writer, warned DSK that he "would never be capable of [the] asceticism" necessary to win a Presidential election

Jean Christophe Cambadelis, socialist politician and friend. He said, "His close friends cannot believe that he is guilty."

He went to all the fancy parties

Frederic Lefebvre, an adviser to Nicolas Sarkozy, claims to have seem photos of Kahn leaving Les Chandelle, a popular Parisian club with an erotic twist: scantily clad women are seduced by well-to-do men. The Telegraph calls it a "wife-swapping club."